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Ellie Kildunne on Olympics: 'We’d be stupid not to strive for gold'

By PA
Ellie Kildunne during the Team GB Paris 2024 Kitting Out at NEC Arena on July 03, 2024 in Birmingham, England.(Photo by Barrington Coombs/Getty Images)

England full-back Ellie Kildunne feels “something special” could unfold for Great Britain women’s rugby sevens at the Paris Olympics.

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The Harlequins player, voted player of the tournament when England’s 15s sealed a third straight Six Nations Grand Slam earlier this year, is included in Team GB’s 12-strong squad.

Ciaran Beattie’s side face Ireland on July 28 in their opening pool match at the Stade de France and Kildunne’s sights are fixed on a medal.

Video Spacer

Ellie Kildunne reacts to England’s victory against dogged Ireland in 2023 Women’s Six Nations

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Ellie Kildunne reacts to England’s victory against dogged Ireland in 2023 Women’s Six Nations

The 24-year-old told the PA news agency: “As long as we put ourselves in the best place possible, do what we know we can do and do our jobs really well, something special is going to happen.

“And I’m looking forward to that moment because I can feel it. The screws are tightening.

“Going to Paris is special anyway, but we’d be stupid not to strive for gold. We’re professional athletes, of course we’ll strive for gold.

“But as long as we put our best performance out there, and leave nothing out there, I’ll be proud of every single person on the pitch.

“Obviously I’d like to come and have an interview after with a gold medal in my teeth, but that’s what we’re striving for, our absolute best.”

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Team GB, currently eighth in the world sevens rankings, lost out to Canada and Fiji respectively in the bronze-medal matches in Rio and Tokyo.

Ellie Kildunne Sophie de Goede WXV 1
DUNEDIN, NEW ZEALAND – OCTOBER 27: Ellie Kildunne of England runs with the ball whilst tackled by Sophie de Goede of Canada during the WXV1 match between England and Canada at Forsyth Barr Stadium on October 27, 2023 in Dunedin, New Zealand. (Photo by Hagen Hopkins – World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images)

They qualified for Paris in June last year by winning gold at the European Games in Krakow, beating hosts Poland 33-0 in the final, but they lost 19-5 to France last month in the Hamburg showpiece, the last tournament before the Olympics.

Kildunne, top try-scorer in the Six Nations with nine in five matches, urged sports fans to tune into the rugby sevens during the Games.

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“Once upon a time you’d have said ‘we know exactly who’s going to win’,” she said.

“But the fact we’re in a situation where you actually don’t know who’s going to win is pretty cool.

“The game’s growing, women’s sport is growing and we’re just in that golden era where we get to be a part of that.

“If you’re going to watch any of the Olympic events, watch the rugby because there’s going to be a lot of surprises and it will be so exciting.”

Kildunne, also top of the Six Nations’ statistic charts for line breaks and metres carried with the ball, has made no secret of her desire to be considered the outstanding player of her era.

“Personally I’m striving to be the best player in the world and to be part of a Team GB group that is so special and talented, I’m always going to have that incentive,” she added.

“Every team that I’m part of, whether that is Team GB, the Red Roses or Harlequins, they all just feed in little different things to my armour and I’m grateful for that.

“But without such a good team behind me I wouldn’t have the opportunity. This isn’t an individual sport. No-one is going to win an Olympic rugby sevens medal on their own.”

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J
JW 8 minutes ago
Can Joe Schmidt create an 'Australian Way' punters will embrace?

Didn't really see Ireland doing any breaking down of the inside channel in that video. What was clear from just watching the first 15 minutes of this game is how Australia are working at it, and how, as you educate, close they could be to making things 'click'. How they could be breaking down those inside channels in just 6 or 7 phases rather than 30 (really it was two 15 phases as they attempted to end it with that grubber for touch but it was charged down, before again going for a 5 meter lineout on the other wings side).


What I did actually find stark in that old video is how the All Blacks didn't need any favours in creating pressure out wide. Ireland didn't give them a sniff (unlike SA last week) but that side had superior angle running and linking with the Smith's and Keiran Read. This AB team doesn't have that. Though I did also watch the first half of ABvPumas 2nd 21' test yesterday and it was also stark in that play how Reiko did some fabulous distributing in contact for his outside runners (he also used footwork to break through the midfield). In a similar respect the backrow also had Sotutu providing try involvements through classy interplay/linking in every score in that first 40 minutes (he didn't do much else from what I noticed though). That is the picture that is missing from that 4minutes of phase play from Australia. Valetini looked like he has the skills and deftness to pull those sorts of plays off though. He appeared to be looking for an opportunity a few times, he just needs someone to commit to the running line (at the right time, given the right picture, perhaps LSLs job as I didn't see him really filling in another role in that seqeunce) and he can pull those flat precision passes off.


That try is all classic Wallaby DNA. Pulled straight out of a 90's early 2000's hl real.


Continuing to place importance on retention and The Australian Way is the key, I think they go hand in hand and perhaps what Australia has been missing in recent attempts. Actually being able to hold onto the ball. So much quality talent available even in this only domestic team.

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